Lamb and Lynx Gaede reveal they're now hippies after giving up Hitler-loving ways

THEY are the identical blonde, blue-eyed twin sisters who sparked global outrage at 13 singing about their love of Hitler and white supremacy.

But in 2012, Lynx and Lamb Gaede - formally members of neo-Nazi band Prussian Blue - have thrown in their swastikas and Hitler T-shirts to embrace a hippie life of diversity, drugs and peace.

“My sister and I are pretty liberal now,” Lamb told US TV.

“Personally, I love diversity! I’m stoked that we have so many different cultures.”

The girls also say cannabis had saved their lives and helped inspired them to change, The Sun reported.

Lynx said: "I’d probably be dead if I didn’t have it. It also rekindled the creative impulses I once channelled into my music.”

The pair said they had escaped the control of their mother April who home-schooled them in Bakersfield, California, surrounded by far-right ideology because mainstream schools “misrepresented history”.

Seven years ago as Prussian Blue, named after a chemical by-product used to gas Jews in WWII, they used to sing songs like Aryan Man Awake and gave Nazi salutes on stage during far-right rallies in the US.

As a 13-year-old, Lamb was quoted as saying: "If you start mixing races it all becomes one big mess and we don’t want that.

“Adolf Hitler was a great man who was only trying to preserve his own race in his own country.”

The girls soon attracted worldwide condemnation but now say back then they were “just kids”.

After a series of health problems the girls began using cannabis for medical purposes.

Lynx was diagnosed with cancer at 15 while Lamb suffers from scoliosis and chronic back pain.

Lynx now wants to go to college and the pair plan to campaign for the legalisation of marijuana across the US.

But their mother insists the girls’ change of heart is “a phase” and that they will soon return to their Nazi roots.